
The only thing I can't test is the longevity of the print on this paper.

There's sligh color difference compare with Canon Pro II but hardly noticeable.

The version before 2008 was made in US, 72LB, smell bad, thiner than Canon Photo Paper Pro II. Print as good as Canon Photo Paper Pro II if not better. The latest version is made in Germany (packaged in US), started in 2008. Or it could be that this Staples paper is so popular that somebody else already went through his own testing and can provide you with exactly the correct settings or a profile.I have exactly the same question and would like to share my experience with this paper on Canon Pro 9000 MKII for the 13x19 paper (sku 564116)īeware that there are multiple versions of this paper with same SKU number. Or you look for a 3rd party ink supplier with icc support - some offer even a free profile made for your paper if you buy inks from them, you can continue to use the Staples paper in this case, with a matching profile. Or you plan to use refill inks in the future, as well for cost reasons, and get papers and inks from a supplier which provides as well matching icc-profiles - for their inks and papers. Or you look for 3rd party papers for which the supplier makes matching icc-profiles available, premium brand paper suppliers typically make profiles available for their papers and popular printers with genuine inks. In case you don't have a matching icc-profile - matching to the ink and paper in combination - you rather may use the extended color settings in the driver and adjust those such that you get a printout which you consider the best, and you use those settings from thereon.

? You have some options in your case - you go and try various settings with test images, compare them and pick those settings which you like most. Are you using genuine ink cartridges ? You probably bought the paper in question for cost reasons vs.
